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Anonymous ID: aqWd+p1X/pol/510638819#510654383
7/17/2025, 9:39:48 PM
>>510653956
>>510654067
>>510654218
https://webcache.googleusercontent.com/search?q=cache:ROEUFlxvxWsJ:https://www.artbyroeder.com/bedouin/Lecture%2520Book%2520on%2520the%2520Sinai%2520Bedouin%2520Tribes.pdf
https://webcache.googleusercontent.com/search?q=cache:orKOQDlBS78J:https://www.yumpu.com/en/document/view/6354710/tribe-chapter-art-by-larry-roeder

>But if the fellah were as difficult in the 1300's for the government to tax as they were inthe 1800's, they could not have been as tough a customer as Sultan Nasir. This was not aman to challenge. He had a reputation for jumping off of his throne and beatingdignitaries till they bled. Take one occasion when he sent one of his favorites to prison tostarve. On the eighth day the man was given three covered dishes. Naturally the manthought mercy was about to be offered. Imagine his horror when he discovered the plateswere filled not with food but gold, silver and precious stones! He was found dead fourdays later. The wretch had gnawed his palms off and one finger was still in his mouth.Other cruelties of the time were nailing people to their saddles, or perhaps wrapping arich man's hands in oil and cloth and turning them into torches. His solution for theBedouins? Exterminate the men and carry off the women as slaves.

>For their troubles, Sultan Nasir "slew mercilessly every Bedouin in the land and carried off their women captive." They were nearly all slaughtered.

https://www.jstor.org/stable/41719579

’Abd al-Magid ’Abdin, et al. “SOME GENERAL ASPECTS OF THE ARABISATION OF THE SUDAN.” Sudan Notes and Records, vol. 40, 1959, pp. 48–74. JSTOR, http://www.jstor.org/stable/41719579. Accessed 12 July 2023.

>The Mamluks regarded the ' Urban (Arab bedouins) with much hatred. In Upper

https://eprints.soas.ac.uk/33992/1/11015787.pdf

>Mamluk government and the Bedouins throughout Egypt, the Bedouin revolts for independence, the Mamluk determination to dominate the Bedouins,